29 N.Y.S. 226 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
The judgment appealed from awards to the plaintiff $3,500 for damages sustained by reason of the negligent acts of the defendant, resulting in the death of plaintiff’s intestate. In the early evening of October 4, 1891, the plaintiff’s intestate, a boy about eight years of age, came upon a dock which the defendant had leased from the city of New York, accompanied by his father and mother and three younger brothers and sisters. They resided in the immediate neighborhood, and their little outing was for the purpose of getting exercise and fresh air. Defendant’s dock, upon which they passed from Thirteenth avenue, had the appearance of a platform built out from such avenue. Reaching the string piece, which was the usual heighth, they sat down. A few moments later deceased walked away from them, and, after going a short distance, he fell through an unguarded hole in the platform, about 18 inches wide, and was drowned. This hole was a space between the platform and a bridge which was being so constructed as to rise and fall with the tide; the purpose of the bridge being to permit ingress and egress for passengers and teams from defendant’s ferryboats to the dock. The defendant had been at work for some time in preparing the dock for ferriage purposes, and the work was so far incomplete that the usual guard on the bridge and platform, intended to prevent persons from falling into the aperture between them, had not yet been erected. On the night in question this hole had been left unguarded and unlighted, and without any sign to indicate to people passing upon the dock that there was danger of falling through into the water. Respecting defendant’s negligence, therefore, the question upon the trial mainly was, and now is, whether it owed to plaintiff’s intestate any duty whatever. If it did owe to him, as one of. the public, a duty to warn him of the danger of going upon this platform, then the court rightly denied
Appellant contends that, inasmuch as the commissioners had authority to vest in it exclusive possession and had contracted to do so for the term mentioned in the agreement, plaintiff’s intestate was a trespasser in coming upon the property, and therefore defendant owed him no duty; that the most favorable view of the relations of plaintiff’s intestate towards this property and the defendant was that he was a mere licensee. Therefore it urges that the case is within the rule of Murphy v. City of Brooklyn, 96 N. Y. 642, Id., 118 N. Y. 575, 23 N. E. 887, and Sterger v. Van Siclen, 132 N. Y. 499, 30 N. E. 987. Were it not for the well-understood character of the user which the public are accustomed to enjoy of property
“Tlie true test, on the contrary, is not whether the dangerous place is outside of the way, or whether some small strip of ground not included in the way must be traversed in reaching the danger, but whether there is such risk of the traveler, using ordinary care, in passing along the street, being thrown or falling into the dangerous place, that a failing is requisite to make the way itself safe and convenient.”
This case was cited with approval in Hayes v. Eailroad Co., Ill IT. S. 228, 4 Sup. Ct. 369. In the latter case, as in Jewhurst’s Case, the municipality, it is true, were held liable for injuries sustained upon pi-emises adjacent to the highway; but in Beck v. Carter the owner of the property upon which the pitfall was situated was held liable. In each case liability was predicated on the ground that the situation of the property and the circumstances surrounding the user of the highway by the public was such as to make it a duty to employ some reasonable effort to save people from harm. In this case the public were accustomed, and it was their privilege, to use at pleasure Thirteenth avenue, and many of the wharves along its highways. The right to the possession of this particular wharf had become vested in the defendant, it is true, by contract entered into between it and the authorities of the city; but of that fact the public naturally could not have had knowledge. There was nothing to indicate to the people going upon it that they had not the same right, and could not use it with the same impunity, as any of the other wharves in that vicinity and along that avenue. That being so, within the principle of the authorities already referred to, it was